[S2E11] We Don't Work Together Anymore
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\"Next time you feel like you can't take it anymore, you don't go trying to off yourself, OK You find me,\" he said. \"You do anything but pull crap like this, you hear me I am your friend. Look at me. Look at me. I want you to say it. That you will promise you'll call me.\"
As a 30+ mom, Lorelai should really get her shit together. Sit down and make a budget. Tell Rory to get a fucking library card or a part-time job if she wants to keep buying mountains of books on the regular. Cook a few nights per week instead of ordering takeout and limit yourself to one snack on movie nights. It isn't difficult. And also, if we're being honest, it's sad to me that Lorelai doesn't have any savings. SHE HAS A KID. What would happen to her if she lost her job She's monumentally irresponsible and I don't find it cute at all.
I find it hilarious that Lorelai seems to think she's going to charm a banker into giving her a loan ... that if she just calls 3,000 times and is really persistent, things will work out in her favor. She needs to swallow her pride, be nice to Emily, and accept her help. I understand her desire to be self-sufficient, but I don't understand why she does nothing to push herself in the right direction. If she doesn't want to have to ask her parents for money anymore, she should start saving money. Take a personal finance class at community college, for fuck's sake. Ask Luke for tips! Luke has mad cash in the bank.
The two of them pull off at a gas station to use the phone, then call the police. Dispatch puts them over to Agent Schmegan, who decides he'll be at their houses later, and tells them to go back to school. (He also decides that he doesn't want Taylor anymore and will get Nick when everyone is in trouble again.) After Agent Schmegan hangs up, Taylor and Lincoln decide to steal Laffy Taffy. While Link tries to steal Laffy Taffy, Taylor tries to distract the cashier by complaining about the phone not working and also needing to poop. While Taylor's distraction doesn't work, Link manages to do a Now You See Me-style theft. The cashier tells them to leave, so they do.
Since breaking up with Severide, Lindsay's main love interest in the show is her partner Jay Halstead. They share a close friendship, which has escalated to a more intimate relationship and cooled down at various times, due to Voight's vocal dislike for \"in-house\" romances. However, regardless of the status of their relationship, they remained loyal to each other as partners on the job and friends outside of it. Halstead is the only character other than Voight she has confided her past to in detail; likewise, she is the only character other than Mouse and Halstead's brother Will who knows about his traumatic past in the military. When Lindsay was on the federal task force, she starts seeing Halstead after work as they no longer had to worry about breaking fraternization rules. In the season 3 premiere, Halstead is the only one who persistently tries to help her, even after Voight had given up. Following her return from her \"sabbatical\", Voight tells Halstead that he no longer cares about the status of latter and Lindsay's relationship as long as Halstead is looking out for her. After some hesitation, she agrees to take the next step, and they go public with their relationship for the first time by kissing at Molly's. In the beginning of season four, they move in together.[14]
Arden: \"I should be in the Guinness record book. Hey, I'm seventy-four years old. I've got plumbing older than this building.\" [exposes self to Scully and Mulder] \"And it don't work much better either.\"
This is my first post here, but I couldn't keep reading without thanking Alan for these wonderful newbie posts. I read your recap for many current shows, but to go back and do this for the greatest show ever...just thanks.These last 2 episodes have been so extraordinarily heartbreaking, and at the same time weirdly satisfying in terms of screenplay, I really get now all these comparisons with greek (no pun intended!) tragedy.I could keep going for pages about my love for this show, but it's all been said, hasn't itSo I'll mention what's a small blemish, for me, the 'deus ex machina' that is agent Koutris. First, the fact that he seems to call the Greek directly from his work phone seems absolutely unbelievable. Working for a company that handles moderately sensitive economic information, I know how far the IT goes to monitor and store every communication on the company networks... This guy works for the FBI! Even with regularly changing phone numbers on the Greek's side, this seems like a foolish risk to take.I don't know enough about federal law enforcement to judge the realism here, but if we believe Simon, apparently having ONE man inside the FBI makes your organization pretty much bulletproof, all bases covered.Then again I've only watched up till this particular episode, but even if it turns out not to be invincible, it had been pretty close to it for years and years.
At the loft, Michael and Fiona prepare a shape charge (Spy tip alert!). Fiona made progress on Michael's would-be assassin by tracing his last-known place of employment to A.S.A. Dismantling, a company the City of Miami contracts for demolition work. She admires the explosive they made together with Michael.
That night at the Waldorf's, Blair directs Dorota on making Harold's pie while on the phone with Serena, who is with Aaron, but concerned about his fidelity. Blair warns her to put herself first and Serena tells her to be more open to Cyrus' traditions. At the VDW's, Eric arrives home to find Bart in the apartment. He immediately texts Jenny not to come up, as Bart and Lily are home early. However, he hears her phone buzz, as she left it there. He's able to swipe it before Bart can see it, and listens as Bart asks if he knows a boy named Ben Shern. Eric says he's the captain of Jonathan's swim team, and Bart replies that he should ask Jonathan what he was doing Monday night. Eric then sees Chuck in his room and asks how and why Bart would know what Jonathan is doing. Chuck explains that like him, Bart has a PI on retainer at all times. Eric says that that's kind of creepy to hold over friends and family, and Chuck assures him that Bart's people work quietly on the down low. Eric asks what exactly Bart knows about him and Chuck asks how much he really wants to know. Meanwhile, at Aaron's studio, Aaron announces to Serena over a home cooked meal that he is officially only dating her. Pleasantly surprised at this news, Serena says that if she knew they were celebrating, she would have brought champagne. He says he's glad she didn't because he's completely sober and wants to be around people with the same mindset. She lies and says that while she used to party, she doesn't anymore, and Aaron is glad to hear it. At the VDW's, Bart tells Lily that the kids should tell them things before they get caught and that she should ground Eric. She argues that the situation is extreme but as they talk, Eric comes out and tries to leave. Lily tells him that they know Jenny has been staying there and that he should bring her up so they can talk.
At school, after a test, Walt checks his texts on his hidden second cell phone. He received a message from \"POLLOS\". He goes to the restaurant to meet with Gus, but learns that Gus isn't the manager of this restaurant: he owns the entire chain. An underling of Gus, Victor, approaches Walt with his instructions: thirty-eight pounds, truck stop, one hour. Walt tries protesting that he needs more time to get the meth together, but Victor tells Walt to either make the delivery in an hour, or don't come back to the restaurant.
Walt ignores his phone ringing as he packs the meth into a trash bag. He eventually reads a text that Marie sent him: \"BABY COMING!\" Walt is torn between his desire to see the birth of his daughter and the need to complete his transaction. Ultimately, he decides to take the meth and head off to make the sale.This episode contains examples of: Brutal Honesty: After being informed that Walt and Jesse have a huge amount of meth but no way of actually moving it, Saul says it's time they faced up to the fact that while they may be extremely adept at cooking their product, they suck when it comes to actually selling it. Chekhov's Gunman: That polite fast food manager is a lot more important than he appears when he's first seen in an Establishing Shot inside the restaurant. The two rival dealers and their extremely young assassin who murder Combo will become important characters late in the next season. Child Soldier: The gangsters at the beginning of the episode use a little kid on a bike as an assassin. Contrived Coincidence: Skyler goes into labor at just about the same time that Walter is told he has one hour to deliver his first shipment to Gus Fring. Walter makes the dropoff, but in doing so, misses the birth of his daughter. Descent into Addiction: Once Jane falls off the wagon, she and Jesse start hitting the really hard drugs - heroin, specifically. When Walt sees him while trying to get the drugs to complete a trade, he is completely zonked out. Early-Bird Cameo: A variant: this episode contains the first reference to Mike, who goes onto play a prominent role in the series, when Saul mentions he \"knows a guy who knows a guy who knows [Gus]\"-later events make it clear that Mike was the first \"guy\" Saul was referring to. Early-Installment Weirdness: Saul introduces the prospect of Gus Fring by saying \"Let's just say, I know a guy who knows a guy... who knows another guy.\" Mike would later be established as the first guy, but Saul implies a middle-man between him and Gus, when in fact Mike is shown to answer to Gus directly. Fan Disservice: Ted's birthday party scene, in which Skyler, a married and heavily pregnant woman, is pressured by not just Ted, but the entire staff, into singing a seductive rendition of \"Happy Birthday to You\". It's played up to be a very uncomfortable moment given that Skyler is married (albeit unhappily) and Ted is her boss. For the cherry on top, Ted kisses her on the cheek afterwards. Foreshadowing: Ted Beneke is shown having significant concerns about the company's future; later in the episode Skyler discovers that he's cooking the books. Innocently Insensitive: Jesse calls Walt to inform him that Combo has been murdered. Walt, who has interacted very little with Jesse's posse, asks \"Which one is he\" Jesse, appalled, calls him an asshole and hangs up. Let Me Get This Straight...: Jesse prior to meeting Gus:So let me get this straight. He's allowed to know all our names, what we look like, but not the other way around Living in a Furniture Store: Averted. Usually played straight as Jesse has few to no possessions in his new house and it is usually spotless. In this episode, probably as a sign of his and Jane's drug addiction, it is depicted with the usual amount of mess you would expect to find in the home of a drug dealer. Married to the Job: Walt has 38 pounds ready to distribute to Gus. But then, when he's leaving Los Pollos Hermanos, Victor stops him and tells him to get the meth delivered within the hour, or never show his face at the restaurant again. While retrieving the meth from Jesse's apartment, he gets a text message from Skyler saying \"BABY COMING!\" Walt chooses to go through with the sale to Gus, rather than attend to Skyler. Moving the Goalposts: When he meets Walt at Los Pollos Hermanos, Jesse says that Walter will do this and come up with reasons not to leave the drug trade, that Walter will always want or need more money, no matter the risk. Mushroom Samba: Jesse's first Heroin trip has him in his POV levitating off of his bed, while Jane passes out beside him. \"Not So Different\" Remark: Saul remarks that Gus seems to be a lot like Walt. Walt even brings it up when he talks to Gus face to face:Walter White: I was told that the man I'd be meeting with was very careful. Cautious man. I believe we are alike in that way. If you are who I think you are, you should give me another chance. [beat]Gus Fring: I don't think we're alike at all, Mr. White. You are not a cautious man at all. Your partner was late. And he was high. Off the Wagon: After working hard to stay clean, Jane comes falling off the wagon, and she takes Jesse with her. One Degree of Separation: The rival dealers who killed Combo in the beginning of the episode will later be revealed to in fact be working for Gus, who Walt and Jesse strike a deal with after said murder. The Oner: Jesse on his heroin trip. Out-of-Character Alert: When Walt is spending the day at Los Pollos Hermanos waiting for the drug buyer to show up. In the refection of the windows, Walt sees Gus looking in his direction, and he's scowling at Walt, not giving the friendly face he'd been putting on when Walt and Jesse had been there earlier. This tips Walt off that Gus is the distributor. Screw This, I'm Outta Here: Between Combo's death, Badger leaving town to lay low, the loss of the crew's street cred, and the legal consequences if he gets busted again, Skinny Pete decides that selling the blue meth isn't going to work out and tells Jesse he's not going to sell anymore. Street Smart: Skinny Pete has repeatedly been established as Book Dumb, but in this episode he correctly states that Jesse and company are in way over their heads, and that trying to enter new territory to sell their meth was a mistake that made one or more of them getting killed inevitable. Wham Episode: Combo gets shot and killed by gang members, Jesse becomes hooked on heroin and drags Jane back into her old addiction, and we meet Gustavo Fring, a drug lord with twenty years under his belt. White Shirt of Death: Three guesses as to what color Combo was wearing when he gets shot, and the first two don't count.\"I don't think we're alike at all, Mr. White. You're not a cautious man at all. Your partner was late. And he was high.\" 59ce067264